TY - JOUR
T1 - Mental disorders and sexual orientation in college students across 13 countries of differing levels of LGBTQ+ acceptance
AU - Rentería, Roberto
AU - Andersson, Claes
AU - Bendtsen, Marcus
AU - Mortier, Philippe
AU - Auerbach, Randy
AU - Bantjes, Jason
AU - Baumeister, Harald
AU - Berman, Anne H
AU - Bootsma, Erik
AU - BRUFFAERTS, RONNY
AU - Cohut, Irina
AU - Crockett, Marcelo A.
AU - Cuijpers, Pim
AU - David, Oana
AU - Ebert, David D.
AU - Gutiérrez-García, Raul A.
AU - Hasking, Penelope A.
AU - Hunt, Xanthe
AU - Hurks, Petra
AU - Husky, Mathilde
AU - Jimenez, Ana Lucia
AU - Kählke, Fanny
AU - Küchler, Ann-Marie
AU - Mac-Ginty, Scarlett
AU - Mak, Arthur D.P.
AU - Martínez, Vania
AU - McLafferty, Margaret
AU - Monroy-Velasco, Iris R.
AU - Murray, Elaine
AU - O'Neill, Siobhan
AU - Papasteri, Claudiu Cristian
AU - Paz, Priscilla
AU - Popescu, Codruta Alina
AU - Robinson, Kealagh
AU - Salemink, Elske
AU - Siu, Oi-ling
AU - Stein, Dan J
AU - Struijs, Sascha Y.
AU - Tomoiaga, Cristina
AU - van Luenen, Sanne
AU - Vigo, Daniel V.
AU - Wang, Angel Y.
AU - Wiers, Reinout W.
AU - Wong, Samuel Y.S.
AU - Benjet, Corina
AU - Albor, Yesica
AU - Baez, Patricia
AU - Borges, Guilherme
AU - Breet, Elsie
AU - Díaz, Anabell Covarrubias
AU - Cruz-Hernández, Sergio
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2025/6/1
Y1 - 2025/6/1
N2 - Mental health disparities have been reported among sexual minority individuals; minority stress theory posits that such disparities are a result of stigma and discrimination. We estimated the prevalence of mental disorders across sexual orientation groups among first-year college students and whether differences across sexual orientation groups varied by gender and country-level LGBTQ+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer) social acceptance. Using data (N = 53,175; 13 countries) from the World Mental Health Surveys International College Surveys, we performed multilevel logistic regressions to estimate the associations between sexual orientation (i.e., heterosexual, heterosexual with same-gender attraction [SGA], gay/lesbian, bisexual, asexual, questioning, and other) and five twelve-month DSM-5 disorders (major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, alcohol use disorder, drug use disorder). Heterosexual students with SGA (AORs 1.30–2.15), gay/lesbian (AORs 1.49–2.70), bisexual (AORs 2.26–3.49), questioning (AORs 1.38–2.04), and “other” (AORs 1.76–2.94) students had higher odds of all disorders compared to heterosexual students with no SGA; asexual students did not. Significant interactions with gender show that the gender difference in prevalence was greater among bisexual individuals for most disorders and among all sexual minorities (except “other”) for drug use disorder. Significant interactions with country level LGBT+ social acceptance showed some sexual minority groups had lower odds (AORs 0.83–0.95) of disorder as country-level acceptance increased. These findings provide further evidence of mental disorder disparities across a wide range of sexual orientations and how these disparities vary by gender and societal LGBTQ+ acceptance in students from diverse countries.
AB - Mental health disparities have been reported among sexual minority individuals; minority stress theory posits that such disparities are a result of stigma and discrimination. We estimated the prevalence of mental disorders across sexual orientation groups among first-year college students and whether differences across sexual orientation groups varied by gender and country-level LGBTQ+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer) social acceptance. Using data (N = 53,175; 13 countries) from the World Mental Health Surveys International College Surveys, we performed multilevel logistic regressions to estimate the associations between sexual orientation (i.e., heterosexual, heterosexual with same-gender attraction [SGA], gay/lesbian, bisexual, asexual, questioning, and other) and five twelve-month DSM-5 disorders (major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, alcohol use disorder, drug use disorder). Heterosexual students with SGA (AORs 1.30–2.15), gay/lesbian (AORs 1.49–2.70), bisexual (AORs 2.26–3.49), questioning (AORs 1.38–2.04), and “other” (AORs 1.76–2.94) students had higher odds of all disorders compared to heterosexual students with no SGA; asexual students did not. Significant interactions with gender show that the gender difference in prevalence was greater among bisexual individuals for most disorders and among all sexual minorities (except “other”) for drug use disorder. Significant interactions with country level LGBT+ social acceptance showed some sexual minority groups had lower odds (AORs 0.83–0.95) of disorder as country-level acceptance increased. These findings provide further evidence of mental disorder disparities across a wide range of sexual orientations and how these disparities vary by gender and societal LGBTQ+ acceptance in students from diverse countries.
KW - Sexual orientation
KW - College student
KW - Mental disorder
KW - DSM-5
KW - Social acceptance
KW - Cross-national
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105003374953&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2025.04.021
DO - 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2025.04.021
M3 - Article
C2 - 40286461
SN - 0022-3956
VL - 186
SP - 331
EP - 340
JO - Journal of Psychiatric Research
JF - Journal of Psychiatric Research
ER -